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Marie Dorion

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Age

64

Born

1786

Jan 1

Hometown

Saint Louis

Oregon

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Interpreter, pioneer, explorer, working mother, and survivor Marie Dorion was the only woman in a group of 60 people sent on an overland expedition to the Pacific Northwest in 1810.

 

Marie, a Native American from Iowa, was born in 1786. While still in her teens, she married fur trader Peter Dorion, Jr. When the Pacific Fur Company’s westward expedition needed translators, they hired Peter and Marie (who both spoke several Indian dialects, plus English, French, and Spanish). While pregnant, Marie walked, rode horses, worked, cared for her two little boys, and even gave birth on the trail in December of 1811. Her infant died soon after. Five weeks later, the expedition arrived in Fort Astoria. Marie’s legendary courage was challenged again when an Indian attack left Peter dead—as well as all the other men on the trip. The little family fled to the Blue Mountains, where Marie and her boys faced blizzards and starvation—huddling in makeshift shelters and eating horsemeat—yet somehow survived. Marie would go on to have three more children and outlive two more husbands. Marie Dorion, the “Madonna of the old Oregon Trail,” died in St. Louis on September 5, 1850.

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Timeline

1810

Was the only woman on an over expedition sent by Pacific Fur Company to the Pacific Northwest;

1850

Died and was buried inside a log Catholic church in St. Louis.

1880

That church burned down and it is not known where he grave is or where her remains lay.

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